SCOTLAND: The Big Picture
SCOTLAND: The Big Picture
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Why Not Scotland? premieres in Edinburgh
Our new feature-length documentary, Why Not Scotland?, premiered in Edinburgh on 15 March 2024 to kick off its nationwide screening tour. Here are some of the highlights...
About the film:
Like many of her generation, Flo is concerned by the state of nature and fearful about an uncertain future. However, during her travels, she discovers places where nature is making a spectacular comeback, breathing life back into the landscape and revitalising human communities. Encouraged by these stories of hope and renewal, she is prompted to wonder: Why Not Scotland?
Find out more about the film: www.scotlandbigpicture.com/why-not-scotland
Sign the Rewilding Nation Charter: bit.ly/3vhSN75
มุมมอง: 304

วีดีโอ

Why does rewilding give Flo hope? | World Rewilding Day 2024
มุมมอง 4185 หลายเดือนก่อน
In 2024, World Rewilding Day celebrates the people who are transforming #HopeIntoAction through their tangible rewilding successes. This World Rewilding Day, Flo - the star of our brand new documentary, Why Not Scotland? - shares her thoughts on why rewilding gives her hope and how we can all take action to make more rewilding happen. You can take action today for nature, climate and people in ...
Why Not Scotland? Official Trailer
มุมมอง 10K7 หลายเดือนก่อน
Why Not Scotland? is a feature-length documentary which forms a central part of the Scottish Rewilding Alliance’s Rewilding Nation campaign. The film accompanies Flo, a young Scot from Glasgow, on an intensely personal journey, as she seeks out examples of nature recovery around Europe. Like many of her generation, Flo is concerned by the state of nature and fearful about an uncertain future. H...
MAKING REWILDING PAY | The Kinkell Byre Story
มุมมอง 5K7 หลายเดือนก่อน
Once a struggling farm, Kinkell Byre is now a successful wedding venue. Rory Fyfe has set out on a mission to rewild the family farmland near St. Andrews. Can rewilding really work alongside their business? Kinkell Byre is a Northwoods Rewilding Network partner. Find out more about Northwoods: www.scotlandbigpicture.com/northwoods Stay inspired and up to date by joining the Big Picture Communit...
Creating Riverwoods: The Role of Wildlife
มุมมอง 8488 หลายเดือนก่อน
Healthy rivers need healthy wildlife populations, functioning together to sustain a productive system. Today, a growing number of pioneering landowners and land managers are undertaking river restoration efforts that harness this vital synergy, seeking to restore the abundance of life that Scotland’s river ecosystems once supported and recognising the importance of all the pieces of the ecologi...
Creating Riverwoods: Riparian Planting
มุมมอง 9548 หลายเดือนก่อน
Atlantic salmon need cold, clean rivers, but rising river temperatures are increasingly adding to the many pressures already facing this iconic fish. Trees create vital shade, and so restoring native woodland along Scotland’s exposed riverbanks has become a race against time, with landowners, land managers, gamekeepers and fisheries experts joining forces to restore Scotland’s riverwoods and co...
Creating Riverwoods: Floodplains
มุมมอง 8908 หลายเดือนก่อน
As climate breakdown increases the likelihood of heavy rainfall events - increasing peak flows to dangerous levels in our narrowly confined rivers - efforts are being made across Scotland to reunite rivers with their natural floodplains, revitalising wetlands and slowing river flows. Natural floodplains slow the rate at which water travels downstream, protecting salmon eggs in vulnerable gravel...
Creating Riverwoods: Catchment Scale Restoration
มุมมอง 1.2K8 หลายเดือนก่อน
Rewetting peatlands and replanting upland forests benefits whole river catchments, boosting wildlife, reducing siltation and enhancing resilience to droughts and floods. Today, Scotland’s landowners and land managers are alert to the fact that restoring Scotland’s threatened rivers, and saving Scotland’s wild salmon, requires an awareness of what is happening beyond the riverbank, with consider...
Creating Riverwoods: Dynamic Processes
มุมมอง 8478 หลายเดือนก่อน
For centuries, Scotland’s rivers have been straightened, confined and tidied, but today, rivers are being rewiggled, deadwood is being reintroduced and artificial barriers are being removed, returning rivers to their natural meandering course, diversifying flows and restoring connectivity for migratory fish like salmon, all the way from source to sea. The Riverwoods Initiative is championing th...
SHEEP AND LYNX in Scotland: Conflict or coexistence?
มุมมอง 95910 หลายเดือนก่อน
For rewilding news and updates, join the Big Picture Community: www.scotlandbigpicture.com/big-picture-community If lynx return to Scotland, what might that mean for Scotland's sheep farmers? Dr Hugh Webster is joined by Grace Reid (Scottish Region Coordinator for the National Sheep Association) and Fred Swift (livestock farmer) in this webinar, to consider whether coexistence between sheep and...
Sound of Aspen
มุมมอง 479ปีที่แล้ว
Wondering how to recognise aspen? Listen out for the sound of aspen leaves trembling in the breeze. They make a characteristic whispering sound as the paper-like leaves rustle together. Find out more at www.scotlandbigpicture.com/painting-scotland-yellow
Cairngorms Connect: A wild landscape in the making webinar
มุมมอง 2.2Kปีที่แล้ว
In this webinar, Hugh Webster talks to Sydney Henderson, Jack Ward and Wendy Sylvester about the Cairngorms Connect project, discussing a wide variety of topics, including what the project is seeking to achieve, the nature of the partnership, the influence of deer and deer management on the landscape, whether the project might ever consider reintroducing lynx and what the project means for loca...
Cairngorms Connect: The Role of Deadwood
มุมมอง 795ปีที่แล้ว
Cairngorms Connect is a partnership of neighbouring land managers, committed to a bold and ambitious 200-year vision to enhance habitats, species and ecological processes across a vast area within the Cairngorms National Park. In this film ecologist Christina Hunt explains the role of deadwood in a healthy forest ecosystem. For rewilding news and updates, join the Big Picture Community: www.sco...
Cairngorms Connect: Woodland Expansion
มุมมอง 2.2Kปีที่แล้ว
Cairngorms Connect is a partnership of neighbouring land managers, committed to a bold and ambitious 200-year vision to enhance habitats, species and ecological processes across a vast area within the Cairngorms National Park. In this film ecologist Ellie Dimambro-Denson talks about the work taking place to expand the range of native woodlands within the project.
Is Scotland Ready for Lynx?
มุมมอง 6Kปีที่แล้ว
For rewilding news and updates, join the Big Picture Community today: www.scotlandbigpicture.com/big-picture-community A range of contributors - from sheep farmers to ecologists - discuss their hopes and concerns around the return of lynx to Scotland.
Scotland's threatened mountain habitats | Rewilding Reachout
มุมมอง 1.4Kปีที่แล้ว
Scotland's threatened mountain habitats | Rewilding Reachout
Slowing down Scotland's rushing rivers | Rewilding Reachout
มุมมอง 1.6Kปีที่แล้ว
Slowing down Scotland's rushing rivers | Rewilding Reachout
Why Scotland's towns need nature's mess | Rewilding Reachout
มุมมอง 783ปีที่แล้ว
Why Scotland's towns need nature's mess | Rewilding Reachout
Must we choose between farming and nature? | Rewilding Reachout
มุมมอง 853ปีที่แล้ว
Must we choose between farming and nature? | Rewilding Reachout
Forests for the future | Rewilding Reachout
มุมมอง 2.3Kปีที่แล้ว
Forests for the future | Rewilding Reachout
Wildcats: what's next? webinar
มุมมอง 276ปีที่แล้ว
Wildcats: what's next? webinar
Why Not Scotland Teaser Trailer
มุมมอง 918ปีที่แล้ว
Why Not Scotland Teaser Trailer
Living with lynx webinar
มุมมอง 1.5Kปีที่แล้ว
Living with lynx webinar
Leaving a Gift in Your Will
มุมมอง 161ปีที่แล้ว
Leaving a Gift in Your Will
The Beltie Burn: A River Restored
มุมมอง 89Kปีที่แล้ว
The Beltie Burn: A River Restored
Why Rewild?
มุมมอง 2.7Kปีที่แล้ว
Why Rewild?
A Beginner's Guide to Lynx
มุมมอง 2.4Kปีที่แล้ว
A Beginner's Guide to Lynx
Lynx to Scotland
มุมมอง 1.1Kปีที่แล้ว
Lynx to Scotland
WEBINAR: How can rewilding win Hearts & Minds?
มุมมอง 290ปีที่แล้ว
WEBINAR: How can rewilding win Hearts & Minds?
Make Rewilding Your Business
มุมมอง 5652 ปีที่แล้ว
Make Rewilding Your Business

ความคิดเห็น

  • @DanielF-ty3sb
    @DanielF-ty3sb หลายเดือนก่อน

    LOL I thought the river's name was something else for a sec!

  • @pudaydaku
    @pudaydaku หลายเดือนก่อน

    Update pls 🙏

  • @stuartbruff8786
    @stuartbruff8786 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you so much for recreating this wetland area and my best wishes for future similar works. Over sixty years ago, as a small boy, I used to play around a large pond on my way back from school. The pond was where I learned the names of the animals and plants, using the Ladybird and other books from my local library. Then one day, it was the diggers arrived and began converting my pond into a carpark. I grieved for the loss of "my friends" and wondered how long we could go about destroying these havens of life until there were none left. It is so nice to see those same machines helping to recreate these wetlands and attract such life.

  • @chantaltulliez8066
    @chantaltulliez8066 หลายเดือนก่อน

    AMAZING...congratulations for what you are doing for our beautiful planet...doing my bit here in subtropical Australia...

  • @benpaynter
    @benpaynter หลายเดือนก่อน

    As a nation we need to stop coverign plantations in plastic tree guards. There are alternatives to plastic. Guards are almost never removed and just degrade into micro plastics which pollute the area

  • @georgeross9834
    @georgeross9834 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Fantastic guys thank you for all your efforts

  • @forestfox66
    @forestfox66 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    We don't need to eat sheep. I don't. Give the land back to nature and the lynx.

  • @mba2ceo
    @mba2ceo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    First U would need to infuse woods of their diet to sustain a 66 population

  • @LordoftheBadgers
    @LordoftheBadgers 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Inspirational. I'd love to see more wetland like this in my area of SW England.

  • @simongee8928
    @simongee8928 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is amazing. Sincerely hope it works; no reason why it shouldn't and others take note and act accordingly in their areas.

  • @fionamason4725
    @fionamason4725 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Such very cool work you’re doing.

  • @cms9902
    @cms9902 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Lacking woodland all over!

  • @davidblake8612
    @davidblake8612 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    So the wedding venue pays for the rewilding? Including a manager? More details on how the business really pays for this project would have been good.

  • @lonniehicks6625
    @lonniehicks6625 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    ✔️ "Promo SM"

  • @lorenzo3987
    @lorenzo3987 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As a non Scot, I love how these projects are popping up everywhere in Scotland, a land ravaged by man activity with so much potential to become a thriving paradise of biodiversity. Congrats on this amazing milestone! Keep making beautiful Scotland even more beautiful!

  • @jonathanclutton2813
    @jonathanclutton2813 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Brilliant work. Roll on many more like it.

  • @RussTillling
    @RussTillling 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video thank you!

  • @damienrees9660
    @damienrees9660 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great work guys 👍

  • @koholohan3478
    @koholohan3478 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Love seeing large wood debris in rivers.

  • @friendoftellus5741
    @friendoftellus5741 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    ❤😊🌲

  • @BoxingBalls
    @BoxingBalls 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I hope it was worth the 1500 litres of diesel and machinery hours, erosion, and public money - if you stick to agroforestry and regeneration the river will reform over time.

  • @YorkshireSalmonGuide
    @YorkshireSalmonGuide 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As a ghillie on the river Tweed I have planted over 4000 trees in the last 2 years with a view to a further 1600 this season. I don’t strim the banks or spray anything the wildlife here is amazing. I have voles, barn owls, falcons, otters, buzzards, roe deer, rabbits and osprey frequent my beat. We operate a catch and release policy here and put nature first to co inside with the sport of fly fishing. Everyone making little positive changes is better than one person trying to change the world

  • @respectthefish4992
    @respectthefish4992 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    yeah I tell you even if lynx are around they will not show themselves, they want nothing to do with humans. I been to mountains with bears, wolves and lynx and never had any interaction with those. only heard some from locals sometimes or from shepherds about wolves, about lynx though? never

    • @quillo2747
      @quillo2747 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Norway has 15,000-20,000 sheep losses each year, Lynx was about 20%, so still thousands of sheep losses from Lynx every year and they have a lot more wilderness than the UK

  • @davidcloyd1296
    @davidcloyd1296 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This indoctrinated generation is going to lead us into environmental destruction in the name of saving the environment because that’s what Marxism ultimately does and that’s what it’s intended to do according to Marx himself.

  • @SWRural-fk2ub
    @SWRural-fk2ub 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Just need a beaver family now (need to make an artificial dam first to create a small deep lake) and a few wolves to deal with the deer and paradise awaits (so they tell me).,

  • @kennethgilbertdds7249
    @kennethgilbertdds7249 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Let the beavers sculpt it. They know just what to do.

  • @ZarekSilberschmidt
    @ZarekSilberschmidt 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It gives a lot of hope to see people get together on such a scale to support the recovery of Nature. Thank you!

  • @user-sp3wd2nn3e
    @user-sp3wd2nn3e 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You could have all those environmental benefits simply by returning wolves to the landscape.

  • @PAUL000F84
    @PAUL000F84 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Wild animal suffering is the suffering experienced by non-human animals living outside of direct human control, due to harms such as disease, injury, parasitism, starvation and malnutrition, dehydration, weather conditions, natural disasters, and killings by other animals,[1][2] as well as psychological stress.[3] Some estimates indicate that these individual animals make up the vast majority of animals in existence.[4] An extensive amount of natural suffering has been described as an unavoidable consequence of Darwinian evolution[5] and the pervasiveness of reproductive strategies which favor producing large numbers of offspring, with a low amount of parental care and of which only a small number survive to adulthood, the rest dying in painful ways, has led some to argue that suffering dominates happiness in nature.

  • @GlobalRewilding
    @GlobalRewilding 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What a brilliant summary of #HopeIntoAction. Thank you, Flo and STBP Team! Our team are all signing the charter - a way that we can all take action! Here's to a wilder world.

  • @ClaireCelticMystic
    @ClaireCelticMystic 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    "Scotlandʻs a nature-depleted country." Let me unpack that statement, because I imagine those who do not know any different are turning their heads sideways. As a professional Permaculture Designer of 22 years, I see a wet desert, a devastated landscape of monocultural depravity by neglect, and it is perfect to begin here, now, as it is all we have to work with. The contrast will be thrilling. Letʻs go! Nature is regenerative, and we are stewards and our stewardship has been detoured, so "Nature-depleted" looks like endless hills and moors of only a few species, and many and much crucial missing hedgerows, (75,000 miles removed in the UK since 1968, from Knepp Castleʻs WILDING book), and vital woodlands, and mature forests have been systematically removed over centuries. I designed a 258-acre Regenerative Farming Community on Maui, Hawaii for 4 years, and now, I have moved to heal my ancestral home and roots in Scotland, so please email me, and let me know who I can work with on this; claire@natureclan. (net)... thanks for your caring. Aloha, Love, Claire Anderson Graham. Nature Clan, we are nature, and we are here to regenerate the past into flourishing beauty and abundance.

  • @pr7049
    @pr7049 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Lynx is harmless animal in nordics.🇧🇻🇦🇽🇩🇰🇸🇪🇫🇮🇪🇪 and baltics. No threat to humans nor sheep. Lynx is a forest dweller ambushing roe deer, hares, rabbits, mouse, rats and birds. It is no threat to sheep even. Only predation of sheep happens in Norway🇧🇻 where farmers let sheep graze freely without guard in forests.🌲🌳🌲☘🍀Root cause is forest grazing..

  • @pr7049
    @pr7049 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Lynx is harmless animal. No threat to people. No threat to sheep in fields.🇫🇮 It is a forest dweller ambushing roe deer, hares, rabbits, mouse and rats. Only in Norway there is some sheep predation since they let sheep freely without guard graze in forest areas. Norwegian government though compensates these losses to farmers.

    • @quillo2747
      @quillo2747 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      We have no forests, we have lots of dense plantations with no life under the canopy. A lynx wouldnt survive in a plantation, it would be pushed out on the periphery where it will find sheep. We could rewild our forests, but we also need timber and would only end up importing more which defeats the purpose of environmentalism.

    • @pr7049
      @pr7049 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@quillo2747 There seems to be a trend shift in that regard going on bringing back Caledonian forests. There are some protected forests to begin with. This is long time period project. Spruce forest monocultures can be easily converted to nuture nature as well when you go from clear cut method to continous growth method. Science shows that continous growth gives more bang for the money so to say, its more profitable but requires a bit more effort, different way of forestry. The big plus is it also gives nature chance. In continous growth you cherry pick trees for felling. So there is always forest covery, preventing erosion and floods and there is a continous flow of money to the owner. Also there is trees of all ages, like in natural forests. The trees multiply naturally without need of planting. You can then also add native trees amongst spruce. It can be law mandained to add certain amount of native trees into monocultures. This is not a rocket science. There are ways if there is a will. More tree species give more adaptability and protection from tree diseases and insects which will increase in future. In continouous growth forests you have birds to eat insects harming tree growth. Spruce cannot tolerate strong winds, warming climate and increasing amount of droughts, dry weather, more intense raining, floods. These issues will anyway change commercial forestry.

  • @eartheclipse9623
    @eartheclipse9623 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I think I big part of reducing this conflict will include livestock farmers deploying livestock guardian dogs & going back to traditional shepherding methods. we also need to make sure there is sufficient habitat for the lynx to live and hunt within. Where we get lynx from to reintroduce will also matter as the Scandinavian lynx have behaviours where they do occasionally hunt sheep, whereas lynx from other areas such as Belarus do not. Another point is that lynx are ambush predators, they sit and wait attacking from trees down onto prey, Norway farms graze within trees, not on open fields like we do, they are not chase predators, the likelihood of them hunting sheep successfully is minimal. to protect the lynx themselves from poisoning, traps etc, there are detection dogs that can help with that as well. we cannot keep ignoring our lack of biodiversity in this country & we should remember our history of how that occurred and a great deal of it occurred to house sheep over people, native cattle, woodlands and small crofts.

  • @centurione6489
    @centurione6489 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Subject reintroduction to an irrevocable right of farmers to defend their livestocks.

  • @timcarrington5977
    @timcarrington5977 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great work!

  • @olivercraig4148
    @olivercraig4148 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    At 76 I have in my own little way over the years tried to encourage the revival of nature in Scotland but one of the major problems is landownership. Until we stop a tiny minority of said people using the land for their own narrow uses we are fighting a losing battle.

    • @davidcloyd1296
      @davidcloyd1296 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You just said that until we have slavery we’re not going to solve the problem, but you don’t realize that a person is his own private property so taking away property rights allows him to “belong” to another,,, like the government for example.

  • @bryanmcghee3213
    @bryanmcghee3213 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What a joke,ALBA GU BRAITH

  • @kurtzwar729
    @kurtzwar729 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great story. I have watched forest restorations here in the US as well. Deer browsing newly planted or emerging forests will destroy them. Deer are plentiful and prefer new shoots. Without removing deer, this whole project would be doomed. Predators can be introduced after the forest is old enough to sustain damage from deer. There are currently not enough deer hunters in the USA and the UK to keep the deer populations down. And it will be decades, if ever, that there will be enough predators to keep the deer in check and the forest healthy.

  • @atlanticsalmontrust
    @atlanticsalmontrust 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great work!

  • @chm6ef472
    @chm6ef472 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Just registered for the Peebles screening. Don't forget to donate!

  • @chm6ef472
    @chm6ef472 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Sounds like the video version of James Shooter's podcast over the last year. If so it should be great

  • @InYourElementScotland
    @InYourElementScotland 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Looks great. Looking forward to seeing the full film.

  • @GlobalRewildingAlliance
    @GlobalRewildingAlliance 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    We can't wait to see this. Thank you, team, another fantastic inspiring resource by Scotland the Big Picture. #RewildingHope. Alister

  • @andrewmason5268
    @andrewmason5268 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Why not the UK?

  • @Jeffswildlifeadventures
    @Jeffswildlifeadventures 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great Job! It would be fantastic if we could re-establish wetlands all over the world.

  • @lettochfilms
    @lettochfilms 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great job guys. Heart-warming to see so many now getting involved. A good story well told. Thank you.

  • @DavidWatkinsGam
    @DavidWatkinsGam 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Good luck , truly hope it works out, great work, I’m trying to do my bit with some ancient woodland , there are lots of us out there, slowly , slowly !

  • @arturfurdyna8468
    @arturfurdyna8468 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for the opportunity to participate. we have so many examples of how to act.... everyone should ask why not with us....